The Sevenfold Sacrament

In eddies 1 of obsidian
At my feet the river ran
Between me and the poppy-prankt 2
Isle, with tangled roots embanked,
Where seven sister poplars stood
Like the seven Spirits of God.

Soft as silence in mine ear,
The drone and rustle of the weir 3
Told in bass the treble tale
Of the embowered 4 nightingale.
Higher, on the patient river,
Velvet lights without a quiver
Echoed through their hushèd rimes
The garden's glow beneath the limes.5
Then the sombre village, crowned
By the castellated 6 ground
Where, in cerements of sable, 7
One square tower and one great gable 8
Stood, the melancholy wraith 9
Of a false and fallen faith.
Over all, supine 10, enthralling,
The young moon, her faint edge falling
To the dead verge 11 of her setting,
Saintly swam, her silver fretting 12
All the leaves with light. Afar {187}
Toward the Zenith 13 stood a star,
As of all worthiness and fitness
The luminous eternal witness.

So silent was the night, that I
Stirred the grasses reverently
And hid myself. The garden's glow
Darkened, and all the gold below
Went out, and left the gold above
To its sacrament of love,
Save where to sentinel 14 my station,
Gold lilies bowed in adoration.

Had I not feared to move, I might
Have hid my shame from such a night!
Man is not worthy to intrude
His soullessness on solitude;
Yet God hath made it to befriend
Pilgrims, that His peace may pend, 15
A dove upon the dire and dark
Waters that assail the ark,
And lure their less love to His own.
Life is a song, a speech, a groan,
As may be; none of these have part
In the silence of His heart.
. . . . . . .

Lapsed in that unweanéd 16 air,
I awaited, unaware,
What might fall. The silence wrapped
Veil on veil about me, trapped
By the siren 17 Night, whose words {188}
Were the river and the birds.
So close it swaddled 18 me, and bound
My being to the pure profound
Of its own stealthy intimacy,
Had Artemis 19 come panting by,
Silver-shod 20 with bow and quiver 21
Hunting along the reedy river,
And called me to the chase, I should
Have neither heard nor understood.
Or had Zeus 22 his dangerous daughter,
Aphrodite, 23 from the water
Risen all shining, her soft arms
Open, all her spells and charms
Melted to one lure 24 divine
Of her red mouth pressed to mine,
I had neither heard nor seen
Nor felt the Idalian. 25 Between
My soul and all it knowledge of
The universe of light and love,
Thought, being, nature, time and space,
The Mother's heart, the Father's face,
All that was agony or bliss,
Stretched an infinite abyss.
All that behind me! but my soul,
With no star left to point the pole,
Witless and banned of grace or goal,
Beggared of all its wealth, bereft 26
Of all its images, unweft 27
Its magic web, its tools all broken,
Its Name forgot, its Word unspoken, {189}
Widowed of its undying Lord,
Its bowl of silver broke, its cord
Of gold unloosed, its shining ladders
Thrown down, its ears more deaf than adders,
Its window blind, its music stopped,
From its place in Heaven dropped,
From its starry throne was hurled
Beyond the pillars of the world—
Borne from the byss of light
To the Dark Night!
. . . . . . .

The moon had sunk behind the tower
When, for a moment, by the power
Of nature, as even the eagle's eye
Turns wearied from the sun, did I
Fall from the conning-crag 28,
that springs
Above the Universe of Things,
Into the dark impertinence
Of the mirrored lies of sense.
Yet, when I sought the stars to espy
And ree the runes 29 of destiny,
Mine eyes their wonted 30 office failed,
So diligently God had veiled
Me from myself! I could not hear
The drone and rustle of the weir.
No help in that world or in this!
I was alone in the abyss.
. . . . . . .

No Whence! no Whither! and no Why!
Not even Who evokes reply.
No vision and no voice repay {190}
My will to watch, my will to pray.
Vain is the consecrated vesture;
Vain the high and holy gesture;
Vain the proven and perfect spell
Enchanting heaven, enchaining hell.
Unyoked the horses from the car
Wherein I waged celestial war:
Mine Angle sheathes again his sword
At the Interdiction 31 of the Lord.
Even hell is shut, lest spite and strife
Should show my soul a way to life.

Hope dies; faith flickers and is gone.
Love weeps, then turns its soul to stone.
All nearest, highest, holiest things
Drop off; the soul must lose her wings,
And, crippled, find, with no one clue
The infinite maze to travel through,
The goal unguessed, the path untrod,
And stand unhelmed, unarmed, unshod, 32
Naked before the Unknown God.
Oh! stertorous, oh! strangling strife
That cleaves to love, that clings to life!

The Will is broken, falls afar
Extinct as an accurséd star.
The Self, one moment held behind,
Whirls like a dead leaf in the wind
Down the Abyss. The soul is drawn
To that Dark Night that is the dawn
Through halls of patience, palaces {191}
Of ever deeper silences,
Æons and æons and æons
Of lampless empyrèans 33
Darker and deeper and holier, caves
Of night unstirred by wind, great graves
Of all that is or could ever be
In Time or Eternity.

Drawn,
drawn, inevitably spanned,
Tirelessly drawn by some strange hand,
Drawn inward in some sense unkenned 34
Beyond all to an appointed end,
No end foreseen or hoped, draw still
Beyond word or will
Into Itself, drawn subtly, deep
Through the dreamless deaths whose shadow is sleep,
Draw, as dawn shows, to the inmost divine,
To the temple, the nave, the choir, the shrine,
To the altar where in the holy cup
The wine of its blood may be offered up.

Nor is it given to any son of man
To hymn that Sacrament, the One in Seven,
Where God and priest and worshipper,
Deacon, asperger, thurifer, chorister,
Are one as they were one ere time began,
Are one on earth as they are one in heaven;
Where the soul is given a new name,
Confirming with an oath the same,
And with celestial wine and bread
Is most delicately fed, {192}
Yet suffereth in itself the curse
Of the infinite universe,
Having made its own confession
Of the mystery of transgression; 35
Where it is wedded solemnly
With the ring of space and eternity,
And where the oil, the Holiest Breath,
With Its first whisper dedicateth
its new life to a further death.
. . . . . . .

I was cold as earth: the night
Had given way. One star hung bright
Over the church, now grey;
I rose up to greet the ray
That thrilled through elm and chestnut, lit
The grass, made diamonds of it,
And bade the weir's long smile of spray 36a
Leap with laughter for the day.
The birds woke over all the weald 37
The sullen 38 peasants slouched 39 afield;
The lilies swayed before the breeze
That murmured matins 40 in the trees;
The trout leapt in the shingly 41 shallows
Soared skyward the great sun, that hallows.
The pagan shrines of labour and light
As the moon consecrates the night.
Labour is corn and love is wine,
And both are blessèd in the shrine;
Nor is he for priest designed
Who partakes only in one kind. {193}
Thus musing joyous, twice across
Under the weir I swam, to toss
The spray back; then the meadows claim
The foot's fleet ecstasy aflame.
And having uttered my thanksgiving
Thus for the sacrament of living,
I lit my pipe, and made my way
To break fast, and the labour of the day.

16 unweanéd: perhaps a poetic construction, from "to wean": to accustom to do without the mother's milk; to alienate; to disengage from a habit; "un­weaned" might then mean: "still accustomed to the mother's milk," figuratively: "not alienated."

28 conning-crag: a "conning tower": the "commando post" on a ship, this then a poetic way of denoting the Poet's position as observing, not from a tower but from a "crag": a piece of rock hanging out, from his firm position as an illuminated master "above the Universe of Things."